Crumplar v. Superior Court ex rel. New Castle County

56 A.3d 1000, 2012 Del. LEXIS 553, 2012 WL 5194074
CourtSupreme Court of Delaware
DecidedOctober 22, 2012
DocketNos. 643, 2011, 644, 2011
StatusPublished
Cited by29 cases

This text of 56 A.3d 1000 (Crumplar v. Superior Court ex rel. New Castle County) is published on Counsel Stack Legal Research, covering Supreme Court of Delaware primary law. Counsel Stack provides free access to over 12 million legal documents including statutes, case law, regulations, and constitutions.

Bluebook
Crumplar v. Superior Court ex rel. New Castle County, 56 A.3d 1000, 2012 Del. LEXIS 553, 2012 WL 5194074 (Del. 2012).

Opinion

PER CURIAM:

Attorney Thomas Crumplar appeals a Superior Court judge’s sanctions under Superior Court Civil Rule 11. We affirm the Superior Court’s holding that an objective standard should govern a determination of whether Rule 11 has been violated. [1003]*1003We also extend In re Infotechnology, Inc.1 to bar judges from sanctioning attorneys except where the attorney's conduct preju-dicially disrupts the administration of justice in a particular case. Finally, we require that judges conduct a hearing before imposing sanctions on their own motion. Therefore we AFFIRM in part and REVERSE in part the Order imposing sanctions and VACATE the sanctions.

I.Factual and Procedural Background

A. The First Order to Show Cause: Supplying the Wrong Case Name for a Correct Proposition

A Superior Court judge issued to attorney Thomas Crumplar two orders to show cause under Superior Court Civil Rule 11. The judge did that on her own initiative. The First Order to show cause concerned Crumplar’s representations to the court in an asbestos lawsuit in which he represented Joseph Turchen. The defendant in that ease, County Insulation, had moved for summary judgment focused on the argument that Turchen could not show a nexus between its product and the decedent. In one argument made in response to the motion, Crumplar stated:

County did work in a neighboring building. This Court in [McNulty ] found this nexis [sic] sufficient for purposes of summary judgment. Plaintiff has no transcript of the hearing on Summary Judgment and so can only rely on the foregoing statements offered by counsel as officers of the Court.2

After County Insulation’s counsel responded that McNulty settled before the court could decide the motion Crumplar referenced, the trial judge issued the First Order. She noted that the “circumstances raise at least a possibility that [Crumplar] may have misrepresented [McNulty’s events] in an attempt to fabricate a ruling in support of [his] position.”3

In response to the First Order, Crump-lar stated that he had a “distinct recollection” that his firm had prevailed against County Insulation “on a Product ID summary judgment ... arising out of exposure at the Avisun/Amoco polymer/film plant.”4 To find the case “everyone was so certain we won on Summary Judgment,” Crump-lar consulted his staff and incomplete records.5 Crumplar discovered the brief his firm had filed in McNulty, which seemed to corroborate his recollection. He also determined that McNulty had settled the same day as the summary judgment hearing, further supporting his recollection. Based on these records and his consultation with his staff, Crumplar thought McNulty was the correct ease. In fact, Crumplar was mistaken. Although he admitted that it appeared McNulty had settled before the Court heard the summary judgment motion, Crumplar still believed a case existed that supported the proposition he had attributed to McNulty, although he had not located the name of that case by the time he responded to the First Order. Two days later, Crumplar notified the judge that he had contacted County Insulation’s counsel, and with her help he discovered that the name of the case he [1004]*1004should have originally cited was Opalczyn-sJci6

B. The Second Order to Show Cause: Failing to Distinguish Precedent

The Second Order to show cause concerned briefs Crumplar filed in opposition to a different motion for summary judgment relevant to Turchen and to claims involving harm to Gerald Johnston. Three previous Superior Court cases had already resolved the issue presented on the motion. The question was whether McArdle-Desco Corporation owed a duty to warn of dangers arising from asbestos-containing products it did not manufacture. The earlier cases held that because McArdle-Des-co had acted as a supplier during the relevant time period, it did not have the heightened duty borne by product installers or manufacturers. The Superior Court judge took issue with Crumplar’s failure to distinguish these cases, even though opposing counsel had raised them. The judge stated:

Here, Plaintiffs’ counsel disregarded “existing law,” and the Court therefore cannot discern what “nonfrivolous arguments” might have been made therefrom to support their position. Not only were the Court’s decisions in Rotter, Dieterle [sic], and Weber not raised in either of Plaintiffs’ submissions, but Plaintiffs’ counsel presented arguments identical to those rejected by Judge Ba-biarz in his decisions without any ac-knowledgement or explanation of those rulings.7

In response to the Second Order, Crumplar denied that Rule 11 imposed a duty to cite contrary authority if that authority had already been raised by the other party.8

C. The Sanctions Opinion

After finding that Crumplar had failed to show cause why he should not be sanctioned, the Superior Court judge imposed a $25,000 penalty. Relying on Superior Court Civil Rule 11(b), the judge imposed the monetary sanction based on the First Order, but devoted a large portion of her opinion to the Second Order as well.9 After conceding that the $25,000 sanction might appear “arbitrarily excessive,” the judge justified the amount by noting that asbestos settlements and verdicts were “typically in the millions of dollars” and contingency fees were “often as high as 40 percent.”10 The judge stated that “the propriety of the Court’s sanctions becomes self-evident” in the context of the severe burden imposed by the asbestos litigation docket.11 The sanctions also rested on a crucial factual finding:

It is against this backdrop that the Court is called upon to apply Rule 11 sanctions for conduct that amounts to an [1005]*1005attorney’s efforts to mislead the Court and to take advantage of the vast amount of reading generated by the high volume of the asbestos cases in the hopes that distortions of law and fact might be overlooked.12

On appeal, Crumplar argues that the Superior Court judge erred by applying an objective standard to determine a Rule 11 violation, and that even if an objective test applies, the Superior Court judge abused her discretion by finding Crumplar had violated the standard. Second, Crumplar argues that the Superior Court judge denied him due process by making credibility determinations and imposing monetary sanctions without holding an evidentiary hearing or allowing him to respond personally at an oral argument. In response, the Superior Court argues that the judge proceeded properly and applied the correct standard while imposing Rule 11 sanctions.

II. Standard of Review

We review questions of law de novo, and therefore independently determine what process Rule 11 demands.13 The legal issue on which we focus is whether an objective or subjective test applies to a review of attorneys’ conduct. We review decisions to impose sanctions for an abuse of discretion.14

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Cite This Page — Counsel Stack

Bluebook (online)
56 A.3d 1000, 2012 Del. LEXIS 553, 2012 WL 5194074, Counsel Stack Legal Research, https://law.counselstack.com/opinion/crumplar-v-superior-court-ex-rel-new-castle-county-del-2012.